halftheloop:
#17 Human beings can exhibit complex, goal-oriented behavior without conscious awareness of what they are doing. Thus, merely establishing that nonhuman animals are intelligent will not establish that they have consciousness.

Which one of the following is an assumption on which the argument depends?

(A) Complex, goal-oriented behavior requires intelligence

I got this one totally by luck. Can someone explain this one, thanks.

#23 Commentator: HUman behavior cannot be fully understood without niquiring into nonphysical aspects of persons. As evidence of this, I submit the following: suppose we had a complete scientific account of the physical aspects of some particular human action - every neurological, physiologial and environmental event involved. Even with all that we would obviously still not truly comprehend the action or know why it occurred.

Which one of the following most accurately describes a flaw in the argument's reasoning?(B) The purported evidence that it cites in support of its conclusion presumes that the conclusion is true

I got this by eliminating all the ohter answers but i have no idea what this actually means. I think I get that it's circular... right? Can someone explain the flaw here thanks.

luke:
17

this is an interesting one. the word "thus" is what turns the 2 sentences into an argument. without it, they would simply be two independent statements.

like so:

X does not necessitate Y

and

Z does not necessitate Y

but put a "thus" or a "therefore" in there and you have:

X does not necessitate Y

therefore

Z does not necessitate Y

in order for the "thus" to make sense, you have to have something that binds Z to X. either:

Z = X

or

X --> Z

or

Z --> X

as it happens, A) corresponds to "Z --> X"

---------------------------------

23

circularity, exactly.

here's the structure of the argument:

"1) PA is not enough to understand CHB

want proof?

2) if we had PA, we couldn't understand CHB"

not very convincing. 1) is the conclusion and 2) is the "evidence".

halftheloop:
hey luke, thanks for the explanation. so just to be sure - the reason why i was confused by 17 was because i didnt understand how you knew that complex, goal-oriented behavior requires intelligence and is not the other way around. But according to your explanation, if an answer choice had said intelligence --> complex, goal oriented behavior, that could still work as an assumption right?

luke:

--- Quote from: halftheloop on November 30, 2007, 12:26:24 PM ---if an answer choice had said intelligence --> complex, goal oriented behavior, that could still work as an assumption right?

--- End quote ---

yessir

Ruttiger:

--- Quote from: luke on November 30, 2007, 01:28:46 PM ------ Quote from: halftheloop on November 30, 2007, 12:26:24 PM ---if an answer choice had said intelligence --> complex, goal oriented behavior, that could still work as an assumption right?

--- End quote ---

yessir

--- End quote ---

No, it wouldn't. For all that assumption says, intelligence could also entail consciousness.